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IIS 7.0 : Managing Configuration - Backing Up Configuration, Using Configuration History & Exporting and Importing Configuration

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In the course of working with IIS configuration, you will need to perform a variety of management tasks in addition to editing the configuration itself. Notably, you will need to back up and restore configuration, in order to revert from unintended changes or recover from corrupted configuration files. This is especially critical because the ease of editing IIS XML configuration files also makes it easy to make undesired changes.

In fact, when working with IIS configuration, you should always insure that you make a backup that can be used to go back to the state before the changes. Luckily, IIS makes it very easy to do this.

In this section, we will review the management tasks around backing up and restoring IIS configuration. We will also discuss setting up shared configuration between multiple servers and setting up configuration delegation that enables some configuration to be set in distributed web.config configuration files.

Backing Up Configuration

Before making changes to IIS configuration files, you should back them up so that you can restore them later if your changes corrupt configuration or result in incorrect server operation. The latter is a critical reason—the server may look like its working properly initially until a future time when problems are detected, at which point you may want to come back to the previous configuration state.

Typically, it is not necessary to make special arrangements to back up delegated configuration located in web.config inside your Web site structure, because those files are backed up together with your site content (of course, you need to maintain backups of your site content for this to work).

However, if you make changes to the server-level configuration files, you should make a backup of server configuration. Thankfully, IIS 7.0 makes it easy to do that via the Appcmd command line tool.

From an administrative command prompt, type

%windir%\system32\inetsrv\ AppCmd Add Backup MyBackup

This creates a backup of IIS configuration files, including applicationHost.config, redirection.config, and administration.config, and custom schema files if there are any. The backup is created as a named directory under the %windir%\system32\inetsrv\backup directory, using the name you specified to the “Add Backup” command. This directory will contain the backed-up files.

Note

If you do not specify a backup name, Appcmd will automatically create a name using the current date and time.


You can list the backups made on your system by using the List Backups command.

%windir%\system32\inetsrv\AppCmd List Backups

Then, you can restore any of the listed backups by using the Restore Backup command.

%windir%\system32\inetsrv\AppCmd Restore Backup "MyBackup"

The restore command will restore all of the files in the backup folder, overwriting the current server configuration with those files. No confirmation prompt is given, so always consider backing up the current configuration first before restoring another set.

A note about configuration file security and encryption: the backup process simply copies the server configuration files to the inetsrv\backup directory, which by default is secured with the same NTFS permissions as the inetsrv\config directory, which contains the original files. If the files contain encrypted configuration, those details will stay encrypted in the backed-up copies. No additional encryption is performed as part of the backup mechanism. Therefore, the files are only protected when they are in the backup directory and are not safe to place in an offline location without additional protection.

Using Configuration History

By default, IIS 7.0 via the AppHostSvc will check every two minutes to see if applicationHost.config has changed, and if so will make a backup of the file. You’ll find the backed-up configuration files in the Inetpub\history folder by default. You can change both the location of the backups as well as several other configurable parameters in the <configHistory> configuration section, as shown in Table 1.

Table 1. <configHistory> Attributes
AttributeDefault SettingDefinition
EnabledTrueThis value indicates whether configuration history is enabled or disabled
Path%systemdrive%\inetpub\historyThe path where history directories will be created and stored
maxHistories10The maximum number of directories retained by IIS 7.0
Period00:02:00The time between each check made for changes by IIS 7.0

If you do nothing at all, the values listed in Table 4-7 are preconfigured for you. To modify these values, you need to enter them into applicationHost.config, because the IIS Manager does not have a UI for configuring this section of applicationHost.config. You can use Appcmd for this. For example, the following command will change the path for storing backups to %systemdrive%\MyWebHistory. Note that the path must exist first or the service will not work.

%windir%\system32\inetsrv\Appcmd set config /section:configHistory
"/path:%systemdrive%\MyWebHistory"

You can use the Appcmd Restore Backup command to restore any of the configuration history backups the same way you restore manual backups performed by the Appcmd Add Backup command. You can list all of the available backups, including both manual and configuration history backups, by doing the following.

%windir%\system32\inetsrv\AppCmd List Backups

Exporting and Importing Configuration

By default, IIS 7.0 configuration stores no secrets and therefore is not tied to a specific server as it was in previous versions. The reason for the IIS 6.0 metabase to be tied to a local server and protected is that by default it contains the passwords for the anonymous user and IWAM user. If these passwords were discovered, it is feasible they could be used to log on to the server. They were random and complex, which provided a high very high degree of security.

In IIS 7.0, the anonymous user (IUSR) is a “built-in” account rather than a local account, so it does not require a password. Don’t worry, even though there is no password, you can’t use this built-in account to log on to the server. There is no possibility that the IUSR account can be used to log on locally or remotely except through IIS. In addition, there is no IWAM account, since IIS5 application isolation mode is not part of IIS 7.0. Since there are no secrets by default in applicationHost.config, there is no need to key it to an individual server.

This means that you can take applicationHost.config from one server and copy it to another server provided you also synchronize the server encryption keys, presuming the target server has the same content and directory structure. This provides a simple mechanism for exporting and importing configuration between servers.

Note

To use the applicationHost.config file from one server on another server, you do need to make sure the servers use the same configuration encryption keys. This is because applicationHost.config contains encryption session keys that are themselves encrypted using the server’s RSA configuration key. 


In the case in which your configuration files do contain encrypted information, such as application pool identities, the configuration files are tied to the specific server on which the encryption information is generated. You can, however, export and import the configuration keys in order to allow multiple servers to share the same encrypted configuration—in fact, this is one of the requirements for the shared configuration feature supported by IIS 7.0.

Unlike IIS 6.0, IIS 7.0 does not provide a built-in mechanism to export configuration for a particular site, as opposed to exporting the entire server’s configuration. In a lot of cases, this can be accomplished by manually re-creating the site definition on the target server and then simply copying the site content, which can now define its configuration in the web.config files contained within the site’s directory structure.

However, if the site configuration is located inside location tags in applicationHost.config, there is no automated mechanism to export it. You can, of course, simply copy the contents contained in the location tag (including the location tags) and add it to the bottom of another applicationHost.config. An automated mechanism may become available in the future.

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